Population, Russian values key to our future: Putin

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia must increase its population and develop its patriotic and spiritual values or lose its soul and face collapse, President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday.

In his first state of the nation address since he started a six-year third term in May, Putin mixed discussion of the need to fight corruption and improve state services such as schools with lofty talk of the Russian identity and soul.

He issued a familiar warning to the West and his own political foes, saying that foreign meddling in Russian politics was unacceptable and that politicians must not accept financial support from abroad.

On the world stage, he said Russia was counteracting those who sow chaos, an apparent reference to U.S. military action abroad and Western support for government opponents in nations such as Libya and Syria.

But the focus in the speech to lawmakers in an ornate Kremlin reception room, was mostly domestic - and Putin suggested the biggest threat to Russia was from a population that has fallen by millions since the 1991 Soviet collapse.

Russia’s population fell to 141.9 last year from 148.7 in 1992, according to the World Bank.

“If the nation is not capable of preserving itself and reproducing, if it loses it vital bearings and ideals, then it doesn’t need foreign enemies - it will fall apart on its own,” Putin said.

“For Russia to be sovereign and strong, we must be more and we must be better,” he said in comments televised nationwide.

Putin reiterated warnings against extremism and calls for ethnic harmony, saying that despite the country’s diversity “we are one people - Russians.”

SPIRITUAL BONDS

“We must not only preserve but develop our national identity and soul. We must not lose ourselves as a nation - we must be and remain Russia,” he said in his 80-minute address.

Thirteen years after he rose to power, and more than two decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Putin still seems to be searching for an overarching idea to unite Russians.

With the patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church sitting in the front row, Putin said it is crucial to “support institutions that are bearers of traditional values.”

“It is painful for me to say this, but I must: Russian society today is experiencing an obvious deficit of spiritual bonds,” Putin said. “Mercy, compassion and support for one another - a lack of those things that have always made us stronger, of which we always were proud.”

His remarks appeared aimed to cast moral values as the lynchpin of Russian society without specifically singling out the Russian Orthodox Church, which most Russians identify themselves with though only a minority regularly go to church and the country has a millions-strong Muslim minority.

In power since 2000 as president or prime minister, Putin as used annual appearances to shape an image of a strong, sharp-minded leader in command of economic facts and figures and with a finger on the pulse of the people.

But public confidence in the government is low, and pressure is growing on the Kremlin to translate oil and gas income into improvements in roads, schools, police, pensions, housing and healthcare that millions find wanting.

Putin devoted much of the speech to such issues, and he vowed tougher efforts to tackle corruption that has hobbled Russia’s post-Soviet resurgence and shown few signs of easing since he came to power.